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Is VMware a Buffett Stock?

Let’s find out.

As the world's third-richest person and most celebrated investor, Warren Buffett attracts a lot of attention. Thousands try to glean what they can from his thinking processes and track his investments.

We can't know for sure whether Buffett is about to buy VMware(NYSE: VMW) -- he hasn't specifically mentioned anything about it to me -- but we can discover whether it's the sort of stock that might interest him. Answering that question could also reveal whether it's a stock that should interest us.

In his most recent 10-K, Buffett lays out the qualities he looks for in an investment. In addition to adequate size, proven management, and a reasonable valuation, he demands:

Consistent earnings power.

Good returns on equity with limited or no debt.

Management in place.

Simple, non-techno-mumbo-jumbo businesses.

Does VMware meet Buffett's standards?

1. Earnings powerBuffett is famous for betting on a sure thing. For that reason, he likes to see companies with demonstrated earnings stability.

Over the past five years, VMware has grown its earnings pretty significantly.

2. Return on equity and debtReturn on equity is a great metric for measuring both management's effectiveness and the strength of a company's competitive advantage or disadvantage -- a classic Buffett consideration. When considering return on equity, it's important to make sure a company doesn't have an enormous debt burden, because that will skew your calculations and make the company look much more efficient than it actually is.

Since competitive strength is a comparison among peers, and various industries have different levels of profitability and require different levels of debt, it helps to use an industry context.

Company

Debt-to-Equity

Return on Equity (LTM)

Return on Equity (5-Year Average)

VMware

10%

14%

30%

Oracle(Nasdaq: ORCL)

40%

24%

24%

NetApp(Nasdaq: NTAP)

33%

20%

15%

Citrix Systems(Nasdaq: CTXS)

0%

13%

11%

Source: Capital IQ, a division of Standard & Poor's.

VMware produces a rather high return-on-equity ratio compared with its peers while employing little debt.

3. ManagementCEO Paul Maritz has been at the job since 2008. He’s worked in the computer industry for some 30 years, working in software development for Intel and managing software development and cloud computing projects for Microsoft.

4. BusinessVirtualization and cloud computing are pretty susceptible to technological disruption. It might be a burgeoning field, but it’s not one Buffett would personally feel comfortable with due to its high rate of change and his lack of knowledge about it.

The Foolish conclusionRegardless of whether Buffett would ever buy VMware, we've learned that although the company operates in an industry that he would probably shy away from, it does exhibit many of the other characteristics of a quintessential Buffett investment: growing earnings, high returns on equity with limited debt, and tenured management.